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January 2009 - Posts

Foreclosure News for Jan. 19, 2009

One Idea for Bank Crisis: Quarantine the Bad Assets
Binyamin Appelbaum and David Cho
Washington Post

A housing bubble bursting, banks faltering toward failure, a nation plunging into recession.
The year was 1991, and the Swedish government responded with a dramatic plan: Unpaid loans and other troubled assets would be dumped into new state-owned banks, scrubbing the banking industry of problems in the hope of sparking a lending revival.

Britain announces 2nd banking rescue plan
David Stringer
The Associated Press

LONDON -- Britain announced a second rescue plan for the country's ailing banks on Monday, hoping to thaw frozen lending by offering to insure banks against large-scale losses on bad assets they already hold.

Obama advisor warns banks on the price of more aid
Tom Petruno, Los Angeles Times

President-elect Barack Obama's top economic advisor, Larry Summers, gave another verbal lashing to the nation's banks in a TV appearance Sunday.

The second half of the $700-billion bank bailout fund, Summers said on CBS' "Face the Nation," will come with more strings attached for lenders -- something he and others in the new administration, and in Congress, already had signaled, because of disappointment with the industry's response to government help so far.

U.S. economy may sputter for years
Peter G. Gosselin, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Washington -- Transfixed by the daily spectacle of dismal economic news and wild Wall Street swings, few Americans have looked up to see what a wide array of economists say lies beyond the immediate crisis.

And with good reason: The picture isn't pretty. 

Published Mon, January 19 2009 9:56 AM by joelc
Foreclosures Outnumber New Homes, 30-Year Mortgage Falls Below 5 Percent

When Foreclosures Outnumber New Homes
Boston Globe
January 16, 2009

The number of people losing their homes to foreclosure across the country is now outstripping the number of new homes being built. More than 860,000 homes were foreclosed on last year, according to RealtyTrac. All told, builders were on track, as of last November, to build just 640,000 new homes and condos in 2008.

Benchmark 30-Year Mortgage Falls Below 5% For First Time
CNN Money.com
January 16, 2009

The benchmark 30-year mortgage fell below 5% for the first time ever in Freddie Mac's weekly rate survey as economic weakness continued to push interest rates lower, the mortgage agency said Thursday.

Bank of America, Citigroup Post Major Losses
Washington Post
January 16, 2009

Two of the country's largest banks posted major fourth-quarter losses today, pushed deep into the red by a weakened economy despite massive infusions of government capital to ensure their stability.

Scramble for Solutions as Foreclosures Rise at Record Speed
January 16, 2009
YAHOO! News

Foreclosures jumped a record 80 percent last year, according to a new report by consulting firm RealtyTrac. The rise comes despite

Published Fri, January 16 2009 9:05 AM by Octavion
2.3 Foreclosures in 2008, Foreclosure Guide Helps Homeowners

Foreclosures in U.S. Rose 81 Percent, Topping 2.3 Million Last Year
Bloomberg News
January 15, 2009

U.S. foreclosure filings jumped 81 percent last year as falling house prices, tighter mortgage lending and the longest recession in a quarter century battered property owners, RealtyTrac Inc. said.

U.S. Foreclosure Filings Up 81 Percent in 2008
The Associated Press
January 15, 2009

More than 2.3 million American homeowners faced foreclosure proceedings last year, an 81 percent increase from 2007, with the worst yet to come as consumers grapple with layoffs, shrinking investment portfolios and falling home prices.

Introducing 'The MLS Bill of Rights'
Inman News
January 15, 2009

A broker-controlled statewide MLS in Connecticut has released "The MLS Bill of Rights," a document that denounces MLS boundaries as barriers to business and calls for MLS participants to have access to all property listings in the state or states where they are licensed.

Foreclosure Guide Helps Homeowners
PR Newswire
January 15, 2009

Sherry Lee, a Florida Real Estate Broker, has written "What to Expect When You Are Expecting Foreclosure" as an answer the growing number of calls she has been fielding from distressed property owners. The 80-page book provides quick reference for homeowners and investors who have questions about their mortgage situation.

Published Thu, January 15 2009 1:41 PM by Octavion
2.3 Million Properties with Foreclosure Filings in 2008

Foreclosure filings were reported on 2.3 million U.S. properties in 2008, an increase of 81 percent from 2007 and up 225 percent from 2006, according to the RealtyTrac U.S. Foreclosure Market Report released today.

The steep annual increase came despite a quarterly decrease in the fourth quarter after nine consecutive quarterly increases. And the fourth quarter decrease came despite a surge in foreclosure activity in December. The conflicting trends come largely as a result of artificial pressures on the foreclosure market, according to RealtyTrac CEO James J. Saccacio.

 “Clearly the foreclosure prevention programs implemented to-date have not had any real success in slowing down this foreclosure tsunami. And the recent California law, much like its predecessors in Massachusetts and Maryland, appears to have done little more than delay the inevitable foreclosure proceedings for thousands of homeowners," he said, referring to California SB 1137, which went into effect Sept. 15, 2008, and required lenders to contact distressed homeowners about their intent to foreclosure 30 days before filing a Notice of Default.

That law had a noticeable impact on Notice of Default filings in California, with those filings decreasing from around 44,000 in August to around the 20,000 level in September, October and November. But then NOD filings spiked back up to more than 40,000 in December.

A similar trend occurred in Massachusetts over the past few months, after foreclosure-extending legislation was enacted there in May.

 

View Full Report.

Free Access to Detailed State, County, City and Zip Code Foreclosure Trends

Published Wed, January 14 2009 11:50 AM by darenb
Bankruptcy Law Changes, Tenants Face Evictions as Foreclosures Grow

Bankruptcy Law Changes May Not Cut Home Foreclosures
January 14, 2009
Bloomberg News

A proposed change to bankruptcy laws that would allow judges to reduce consumers’ mortgages may not succeed in reducing the foreclosures that have been dragging down property prices, according to a Barclays Capital strategist.

Banks Take Back 1/4 Million California Homes in '08
January 14, 2009
San Francisco Chronicle

ForeclosureRadar, a paid service that tracks foreclosure listings in every California county, has issued its December and year-end report, and the numbers are grim.

Tenants Face Evictions as Foreclosure Crisis Grows
January 14, 2009
NY1

For thousands of renters, eviction notices are becoming the norm as property owners continue to fall into the trap of foreclosures.

Published Wed, January 14 2009 9:49 AM by Octavion
The Case for Walking Away, Short Sales v. Foreclosure

Housing Crisis Upside: Bargains for Everyone
ABC News
January 12, 2009

Real estate watchers have been saying it for months now: It's a buyer's market and it's only getting better. "It really is almost a national situation where we can find you at least one good deal almost everywhere," said Rick Sharga, the vice president of marketing for the foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac.

FDIC Pushes Banks for Reports on Use of Government Aid
Wall Street Journal
January 12, 2009

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Monday pushed the more than 5,000 banks it regulates to provide information on how they are using billions of dollars in government aid to help struggling homeowners avoid foreclosure.

The Case for Walking Away
Newsweek
January 12, 2009

In January, we're supposed to sit down and organize our personal finances. This year I'll risk my good-girl reputation with a subversive idea: go bankrupt in 2009. If you're reaching the end of your rope, don't try to hold on. Save what you can.

Short Sale v. Foreclosure
Wall Street Journal
January 12, 2009

Is it better to negotiate with a short seller or look for houses already owned by the bank? But bear in mind that in the case of both short sales and bank-owned homes you are negotiating with lenders rather than sellers. In a short sale, the seller might be desperate to accept any offer to avoid foreclosure, but that doesn't matter if the primary and junior lien holders don't agree to it. With bank-owned properties, you will be dealing with the "real-estate owned" or REO department of the lender who took ownership of the house at the auction. In both cases, you should be prepared to be patient, since lenders are overwhelmed with distress sales these days and may take weeks to respond to your offer.

Published Tue, January 13 2009 9:31 AM by Octavion
Judges Modifying Mortgages, Obama Bailout

Realtors' Former Top Economist Says Don't Blame the Messenger
Wall Street Journal
January 12, 2009

On a recent weekday, David Lereah sat in the sunroom of his five-bedroom colonial house. The only sound was the yapping of his dog Maisy.  Once one of the world's most-visible housing experts, Mr. Lereah is disconnected from his old life. The former chief economist for the National Association of Realtors says the group's top executives won't return his phone calls. He says he wasn't invited to the association's 100th birthday bash last May.

Power to Modify Mortgages Sits Well With Judges
Wall Street Journal
January 12, 2009

Federal bankruptcy judges say they are eager to have the power to restructure mortgages for struggling debtors because it could save hundreds of thousands of homeowners from foreclosure. Top Senate Democrats are advancing legislation to let bankruptcy-court judges approve new repayment terms on first mortgages for primary residences for homeowners who have sought protection in a Chapter 13 filing. The proposal allowing so-called mortgage cramdowns, in which the principal amount of the loan is reduced, is one of several efforts Democrats are pushing to give homeowners relief as they wrestle with increasing debt levels and plummeting home values.

Frank Seeks TARP Funds for Foreclosures
Wall Street Journal
January 10, 2009

The federal government should devote at least $50 billion of the remaining financial-rescue funds toward a plan to prevent foreclosures, said House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank Friday.

Obama Lobbies for Release of Second Half of Bailout
New York Times
January 11, 2009

Even as they continued to hash out the details of a nearly $800 billion economic recovery plan, aides to President-elect Barack Obama on Sunday began lobbying a reluctant Congress to release the second half of the Treasury’s $700 billion financial system bailout fund.

 

 

 

 

 

Published Mon, January 12 2009 9:09 AM by Octavion
Additional Foreclosure News for Jan. 9, 2009

Pew: U.S. Hispanics Among Most Affected by Mortgage Crisis

Richard Kaplan, HispanicBusiness.com

January 8, 2009

The deepening recession continues to affect the American consumer and has had a particularly harsh impact upon U.S. Hispanics. A host of new statistics reveal missed mortgage payments, reduced remittances to relatives abroad, and curtailed holiday spending, according to just-released research by the Pew Hispanic Center.

In a new national survey of 1,540 Latino adults, The Pew Center discovered that almost one-in-ten Hispanic homeowners surveyed have skipped a mortgage payment or were not able to make the full payment in the last year. In addition, more than one-third of Hispanic homeowners (36%) say they have fears their homes may face foreclosure. Among immigrant Latinos, more than half (53%) expressed such worries. In 2008, 3 percent actually received a foreclosure notice from their bank.

Published Fri, January 09 2009 10:28 AM by joelc
FOMC Minutes Track Long Course to Economic Recovery

President-elect Barack Obama is going to need his track shoes on to hit the ground running when he takes office later this month. The nation’s tortuous economic course is going to test his endurance and stamina as he winds along a very long-winded marathon.

Although this is not breaking news to anyone, minutes released this week of the Federal Open Market Committee’s December meeting show just how bad things have become mixed with a bit of healthy dissention between the Committee members as to how to deal with the crisis. In the end the meeting resulted in a united statement of position with the Fed coming out announcing a “range” for the federal funds rate instead of the usual exact numerical target for the rate.

The minutes describe the many economic indicators that have taken a turn for the worse just in the period since the FOMC’s last meeting in October. There is a glimmer of hope on certain fronts, but overall, the U.S. economy is in dire straits with the real possibility of a “prolonged retraction” for many years looming overhead.

Factors relating directly to real estate continue to be of major concern. Those factors include:

•    The housing market weakened again as construction activity, new home sales, and home prices declined further
•    Financial markets saw a further pullback in risk-taking
•    Output of construction supplies declined
•    Whatever real income boost people got from recent lower energy prices was offset somewhat by the negative wealth effects of lower home equity and house prices
•    Single-family housing starts and permit issuance declined further in November

One positive factor was the slight ease of financing conditions for prime borrowers thanks to the Fed’s announcement it would purchase agency debt and mortgage-backed securities totaling as much as $600 billion.

An updated forecast prepared for the Committee by staff members revised down its outlook for economic recovery in 2009, with a projected moderate recovery in 2010. Real GDP is expected to fall further than anticipated during the first half of 2009.

All meeting participants agreed the economic downturn had intensified during the Fall of 2008. Household wealth has dropped sharply as credit conditions tightened up, unemployment increased and consumer confidence waned, causing a sharp contraction in consumer spending.

In summary, it looks like the FOMC members were somewhat taken aback by just how bad things had turned in such a short period of time. Whatever solutions they eventually promulgate will have a long, drawn-out course to post-marathon recovery.

What does all this mean for those looking to the advantages of purchasing or dealing in foreclosure property? Most likely it means there is still quite a way to go before the current foreclosure trend peaks out. Even when home prices bottom out, some forecasters expect the economy to drag along the bottom for a number of months (if not years) before prices recover any of the current lost equity.

It looks like 2009 and 2010 are going to be good years to buy real estate at bargain prices. Time to start doing your homework now and get ready to join the race.

Published Fri, January 09 2009 9:55 AM by joelc
Foreclosure News for Jan. 9, 2009

Treasury’s Oversight of Bailout Is Faulted
David Barstow, NY Times
January 9, 2009

A 45-page report is coming out today from the Congressional panel overseeing the bailout and the news is not promising. The report is questioning many of the department’s failures to hold financial institutions responsible for how they are handling taxpayers’ money and not using it to alleviate the foreclosure crisis as they were mandated to do.

Geithner Preparing Overhaul of Bailout
David Cho, Washington Post
January 9, 2009
President-elect Obama’s new Treasury Secretary is already at work figuring out how to retool the $700 billion bailout and spend the remaining funds to get the biggest bang for the buck, broadening its scope well beyond Wall Street and help homeowners avoid foreclosure in the process .

Jobless Rate Surges to 7.2%; Non-Farm Payrolls Drop 524,000
Brian Blackstone, The Wall Street Journal
January 9, 2009

The nation’s unemployment rate has hit a 16-year high. The economy lost 2.8 million jobs in 2008, the most since WWII ended in 1945. Some economists believe the rate will go well beyond 8 percent before long.

Stocks end mostly higher after mortgage deal
Madlen Read and Tim Paradis, AP
January 8, 2009

After Democratic leaders reached a deal with Citigroup Thursday allowing bankruptcy judges to modify mortgages, Wall Street reacted with advancers outpacing decliners 2 to 1 at the end of the day’s trading.


Experts predict major change for MLSs
Glenn Roberts Jr., Inman News
January 9, 2009

The concept of a national MLS is moving forward and being seriously discussed, according to a panel speaking at the Real Estate Connect conference in NYC.

Published Fri, January 09 2009 9:16 AM by darenb
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